Muhammad Sabeel
Bio
I write not for silence, but for the echo—where mystery lingers, hearts awaken, and every story dares to leave a mark
Stories (306)
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The Simple Morning Habit That Changed My Life—And Took 5 Minutes
Mornings used to be my enemy. I’d wake up groggy, already behind on the day, drowning in a flood of notifications and mental checklists. My feet would hit the ground with a sigh instead of a spark. Before 9 a.m., I’d already feel like I was failing—rushing to get ready, skipping breakfast, doom-scrolling Instagram, and reacting to the world instead of leading my own life.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Blush
The Secret Economy of Facebook Marketplace Flipping
It all started with a broken lamp. Not a metaphorical “light bulb moment” kind of lamp—an actual, dusty, brass floor lamp I found in the back of my friend Sarah’s garage during a weekend cleanout. “Take anything you want,” she said, clearly eager to declutter. Most of the stuff was headed to the curb or Goodwill. I hesitated for a moment, then shrugged and hauled the lamp into my car.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Futurism
The Etsy Shop That Started With a Breakup
When Daniel walked out of our apartment, he left with only a suitcase, a half-used bottle of cologne, and my sense of direction. We’d been together for nearly six years, the kind of relationship that had grown roots deep into every corner of my life—shared Spotify playlists, matching towels, joint savings, holiday traditions, even a name reserved for our future dog.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Writers
I’m Tired of Being the Sun for People Who Won’t Turn Around
The Brightest Light Still Needs a Witness There’s a particular ache that lives in the hearts of those who give too much. It’s not loud. It doesn’t scream or cry. It just hums—quietly, persistently—like the low throb of an overworked engine. It’s the kind of ache you feel in your chest after yet another attempt to love someone who won’t meet you halfway.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Humans
Why So Many People Are Quietly Cutting Off Their Families in 2025
The Silent Exodus No One Talks About They don’t make announcements. There are no dramatic goodbye speeches or viral social media posts. Instead, it happens in quiet unfollows, unreturned calls, unanswered texts, and the slow fading out of Sunday visits and holiday traditions. Across the globe, thousands—maybe millions—of adults are quietly, and often painfully, distancing themselves from their families.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Families
5 Books That Broke Me in 2025 (And Put Me Back Together)
The Year Books Found Me When I Needed Them Most Some years break you. 2025 was one of those for me. Not in a loud, dramatic way. More in the slow, silent unraveling that no one notices until you’re too tired to fake a smile. Relationships shifted. Dreams quietly collapsed. I felt adrift in the world I had spent years trying to build.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Writers
When You’re the Only One in Your Friend Group Without a Baby
The Loneliness You Can’t Admit Out Loud It starts with an innocent Instagram scroll. You’re sipping your morning coffee when the algorithm strikes again: a pair of tiny feet swaddled in a hospital blanket. Another pregnancy announcement. Another gender reveal. Another “our family just got a little bigger” caption with pastel-colored onesies in the background.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Families
I Blocked My Parents for a Month—And Found Peace I Didn’t Know I Needed
The first time I hovered my finger over the "Block Contact" option on my mother’s name, I felt a tightness in my chest that reminded me of every Sunday lunch I had forced myself to sit through with a fake smile and a churning stomach. My parents weren’t monsters. They didn’t scream or curse. They didn’t hit or throw things. But they did something more invisible—they made me doubt myself, my worth, and the validity of my own feelings.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Families
Meet The Investor Who Sold His Coffee Shop And Raised $186 Million To 'Disrupt' Venture Capital
Some moments truly last forever. For investor Nasir Qadree, that moment came in 2011 while overlooking midtown New York City in the high-rise office of businessman, corporate connector and political advisor Vernon Jordan. In the room, Jordan—the former executive director of the National Urban League—sat in a grey suit, surrounded by a plethora of photographs with close friends, including former U.S. President Bill Clinton and the legendary entertainer Sammy Davis Jr.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Interview
3 Signs You’re An ‘Overgiver’ In Your Relationship, By A Psychologist
Being an “overgiver” means your default setting is to give more than what’s healthy, sustainable or reciprocated. And it’s not just your time or help; you likely offer others emotional energy, presence, concern, forgiveness and endless second chances, often at the cost of your own boundaries.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Families
FBI Warning—Do Not Install This App On Your PC Or Smartphone
It always starts the same way—with a message you weren’t expecting. You’re going about your day when a text pings your phone or a popup flashes on your laptop. It warns you that your bank account is under attack or your device has been compromised. Then it tells you exactly what to do next: call tech support. Click the link. Install the app. Hurry—your money’s in danger.
By Muhammad Sabeel6 months ago in Futurism











